spring mintspiration, part 1

When I speak Arabic in the street here in Cairo, I usually encounter one of two reactions. The first is astonishment: wow, you speak Arabic! Egyptian Arabic! Where are you from? How long have you been here? (For the record, although the air and the media waves are thick with conspiracies, suspicion, and growing anti-American sentiment these days, I have yet to experience any of that here in Egypt on a personal, face-to-face level. Knock on wood.)

The second reaction (and the less common one) is the nonreaction, and I love it even more than the first. It’s the person who carries on a conversation with me as though it is completely normal for a white twentysomething American girl to appear, alone, in a market or a taxi, and spout pleasantries in the local dialect. The first reaction is fun, but the second feels like home.

The mint seller by the Saad Zaghloul market falls into the latter category. Last time I was there I had so much fun chatting with him that I bought triple the mint I’d intended to – it was so fresh and fragrant, and so cheap, that it just seemed the right thing to do to buy several bunches and figure out what to do with it later.

Spring is rapidly proceeding into summer in sunny Cairo and so this is one in a two-part series about mint – it’s everywhere these days, and it’s the best thing for cooling you down on a hot afternoon. This post is for a Mint Green Summer Salad, and the next (coming soon) is a recipe for mint lemonade, a classic throughout the region.

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I study culinary history and literature in North Africa and the Arabic speaking world; this blog is a record of what happens when I put my research and passions into play at my own stove.

Many of the recipes featured here hail from the Middle East & North Africa or elsewhere in the Mediterranean, but I also love to cook anything that happens to be in season. A recipe index lists all recipes alphabetically; you can also browse by category or search for keywords below.

For less cooking and more history & literature, check out my research blog. You can read more about my work here.